first responders, said Dr. Liise-anne Pirofski
of New York’s Montefiore Health System and
Albert Einstein College of Medicine. That also
might include nursing homes when a resident
becomes ill, in hopes of giving the other people
in the home some protection, she said.
“We need both things desperately,” Pirofski
said. “We need to be able to break the cycle of
transmission and we also need to be able to help
people who are ill.”
WHAT’S THE HISTORY?
These plasma infusions were used most
famously during the 1918 flu pandemic, and
against numerous other infections, such as
measles and bacterial pneumonia, before
vaccines and modern medicines came along.
Long-ago research is sketchy. But in the Journal
of Clinical Investigation earlier this month,
Casadevall and Pirofski cited evidence that
1918 flu patients given the infusions were less
likely to die. And a 1935 medical report detailed
how doctors stopped a measles outbreak from
sweeping through a boarding school using
“serum” from prior patients.
The old-fashioned approach still is dusted off
every so often to tackle surprise outbreaks
such as SARS in 2002, and in 2014 when Ebola
survivors’ plasma was used to treat other
patients during the West Africa epidemic. Even
during those recent outbreaks, strict studies of
the technique were not done, but Casadevall
said there were clues that the plasma helped.
Casadevall thinks that when it didn’t work, it
may have been used too late. “Somebody at